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First road trip

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10-25-2009, 01:00 PM
jsloan
First road trip
I took the Barth out for a little road trip yesterday for about a 200 mile round trip. Pretty uneventful just a couple of things. First was the rattle from the window directly behind the drivers seat. By the time I convinced my wife to deal with it my head was about to 'splode. Little rubber wedges left by the previous owner came in handy!
Second, after I got to my destination that was in a parking lot that was covered in huge rocks and was super bumpy we could smell the alarming scent of gasoline. At first glance I am thinking that it could have come from the front tank being overfilled. I was running off the rear tank because I wanted to clear some of that 12+ month old fuel out of there. After switching to the front tank and driving for a while I didn't notice the smell anymore. Oh, the third thing, which is why I pulled over. We were driving back at night and the headlights were way to dim. I noticed that the alternator gauge was only listing around 9V. I pulled over at the last bright spot on the trip home and swapped in that huge spare deep cycle battery. The gauge read around 11V. I made it home without a hitch but will be addressing these issues before the next trip which will be a shorty.


~Jeff~

1984 28' Regal P30
10-25-2009, 01:11 PM
Mary Ray
Congratulations on your shakedown cruise, sounds like she is gonna make you proud to be a Barth owner.


Mary

Don't mess with us old folks, we don't get old by being stupid!
1968 Barth trailer, 1975 Barth Motorhome and 1985 Barth Motorhome

10-25-2009, 02:04 PM
bill h
quote:
Originally posted by jsloan:

we could smell the alarming scent of gasoline.


That could be lethal. Find the source and correct it.

quote:
We were driving back at night and the headlights were way to dim. I noticed that the alternator gauge was only listing around 9V. I pulled over at the last bright spot on the trip home and swapped in that huge spare deep cycle battery. The gauge read around 11V. I made it home without a hitch but will be addressing these issues before the next trip which will be a shorty.

~Jeff~


Next time, fire up the genset and drive holding the parallel switch.

Or use a jumper connecting the positives of each battery bank, and run the genset. It doesn't have to be very big. I made one out of a coat hangar once.

I could write a book on the hillbilly uses for coat hangars. Smiler


.

84 30T PeeThirty-Something, 502 powered
10-25-2009, 08:39 PM
jsloan
quote:
fire up the genset


I still haven't gotten the genset repaired. Thats one of my to do items. I did think about tying into the house batteries anyhow. but it wasn't necessary.


~Jeff~

1984 28' Regal P30
10-25-2009, 08:50 PM
Rusty
quote:
Next time, fire up the genset and drive holding the parallel switch.


Some of the paralleling switches aren't made for continuous-duty. Jumping the house and chassis batteries and running the genset will work fine.


Rusty


MilSpec AMG 6.5L TD 230HP; built-to-order by Peninsular Engines:  Hi-pop injectors, gear-driven camshaft, non-waste-gated, high-output turbo, 18:1 pistons.  Fuel economy increased by 15-20%, power, WOW!"StaRV II"

'94 28' Breakaway: MilSpec AMG 6.5L TD 230HP

Nelson and Chester, not-spoiled Golden Retrievers

Sometimes I think we're alone in the universe, and sometimes I think we're not.
In either case the idea is quite staggering.
- Arthur C. Clarke

It was a woman who drove me to drink, and I've been searching thirty years to find her and thank her - W. C. Fields
10-26-2009, 10:21 AM
Tom and Julie
The headlight issue is a constant problem. My recommendation is to install a 30 amp relay (there are number of unused ones in the Regency electrical panel below the drivers window) and run the 12v directly from the buss bar to the lights with the headlight switch only switching the relay. You will have to also connect the high beams to a relay (or use a second unused relay) and use the foot dimmer switch to actuate that relay. An electric technician should be able to do this easily without a lot of cost. As for the voltmeter - I found on my coach the voltmeter was connected to the "rats nest" of positive wires under the dash and not the BATT post of the ignition switch. It always read low because it was reading with the load actuated. By moving to the BATT of the ignition switch it indicated the actual output of the alternator, much more useful. It doesn't stop the battery from being discharged but it does show the alternator is putting out 13.8 v when it should.


1993 32' Regency Wide Body, 4 speed Allison Trans, Front Entry door, Diamond Plate aluminum roof &
1981 Euro 22' w Chevy 350 engine and TH 400 tranny
10-26-2009, 12:50 PM
jsloan
quote:
there are number of unused ones in the Regency electrical panel below the drivers window



Anyone know where the equivalent of this is on a regal?


~Jeff~

1984 28' Regal P30
10-26-2009, 12:57 PM
bill h
quote:
Originally posted by Rusty:
quote:
Next time, fire up the genset and drive holding the parallel switch.


Some of the paralleling switches aren't made for continuous-duty. Jumping the house and chassis batteries and running the genset will work fine.


On mine, the paralleling switch carries only the current required to energize the relay, which is far less than the 10 amp rating marked on it. The relay, which appears to be OEM, is rated for continuous duty.

The one time I had to hold it down to drive, my fingertip detected no rise in temperature. BTW, finger fatigue soon moved me to do it only some of the time, monitoring the voltmeter.


.

84 30T PeeThirty-Something, 502 powered
10-26-2009, 10:13 PM
Tom and Julie
This is what it looks like. Each of the buss bars are spanned by breakers and some are not used (they were for the Gillig Bus).




1993 32' Regency Wide Body, 4 speed Allison Trans, Front Entry door, Diamond Plate aluminum roof &
1981 Euro 22' w Chevy 350 engine and TH 400 tranny
10-27-2009, 11:52 PM
jsloan
Actually, the alternator seems to be fine. Someone had bypassed the unused smog pump and the belt was rubbing against the pulley. I opted to remove the pulley to allow clearance for the belt and now all is well with the charging system.

Up next: genset removal.


~Jeff~

1984 28' Regal P30